"Thank you, Juan," MacArthur said, and rose from an armchair to extend his hand. "Fleming, I'm glad they were able to find you."
"I was in the dungeon, Sir," Pickering replied, and nodded at Mrs. MacArthur. "Good evening, Mrs. MacArthur."
"Oh, Fleming, I've told you time and again that we're friends, and to please call me Jean."
"Well then, good evening, Jean," Pickering said.
"Do you have to go back to your 'dungeon,' " MacArthur asked, "or can I offer you something?" He turned to his wife. "The 'dungeon,' Jean darling, is the cryptographic room in the basement."
"Deep in the basement," Pickering added, "and yes, Sir, I have to go back. And yes, Sir, I would be very grateful if you offered me something."
"Good, because I have one thing to tell you which I think will please you, and another thing to tell you I hope ultimately will be cause for celebration."
"Sir?"
"Where the hell is he?" MacArthur asked impatiently. "I am about to wear this bell out!"
Pickering saw for the first time that MacArthur was tapping his foot on what looked like a doorbell button under the coffee table.
The Filipino orderly appeared.
"Ah, there you are, Juan!" MacArthur said warmly, without a hint of displeasure in his voice. "Would you please get General Pickering something to drink? And while you're at it, would you refreshen this, please? Jean, darling?"
"Nothing for me, thank you, Juan," she replied.
"The General drinks scotch-soda, small ice, is correct?" Juan asked.
"That's right, thank you," Pickering said.
"Why do you call it the 'dungeon'?" Mrs. MacArthur asked. "Because it's in the basement?"
"Because the walls run with water, and there is a steel door which creaks like a Boris Karloff movie," Pickering said.
"I don't think I have ever been down there," she said.
"I don't think they'd let you in, dear," MacArthur said. "Willoughby has to have written permission from Fleming before he can get inside the steel door."
"That's not true, Sir," Pickering said. "He would need a note from you."
"The security is necessarily quite rigid, Jean," MacArthur lectured. "It is in the dungeon that Fleming and Pluto and the boy... I shouldn't say 'boy'... and the young officer who was raised in Japan, Moore, analyze intercepted Japanese messages. Only three people here-myself, Willoughby, and Fleming-are authorized access to that material. Or, for that matter, are even authorized to know what MAGIC means."
"I see," she said.
Except of course, you, Jean, Pickering thought. The most serious violation of security vis-a-vis MAGIC is committed by the Supreme Commander.
Or are you being holier than thou? If Patricia were here, would you talk to her, secure in the knowledge that it would go no further?
Juan handed Pickering a stiff drink.
"Thank you, Juan."
"There was a radio from CINCPAC an hour or so ago," MacArthur said. "Actually two, but the important one to you first. That's when I asked if you could be located."
"Yes, Sir?"
"After distinguishing itself almost beyond words in the air war over Guadalcanal, VMF-229 has been withdrawn from combat," MacArthur announced. "I sent a personal radio to General Vandegrift, to which there was an immediate reply. Lieutenant Malcolm Pickering, I am de-lighted to inform you, is one of the officers who survived."
My God, he came through! Pick's all right!
Pickering's physical response came as a total shock to him. His throat tightened. His eyes watered. He was able to keep from sobbing only by an act of massive willpower.
"Fleming's son, Jean, has eight times been the victor in aerial com-bat," MacArthur announced. "A warrior in his father's mold!"
"You must be so proud of him!" she said.
"I am," Pickering said, surprised that he could speak.
And so goddamned relieved! Thank you, God!
"General Vandegrift did not say to where they have been with-drawn," MacArthur said. "I suppose I should have asked. Perhaps Espiritu Santo, or Noumea, or here, or New Zealand. Should I send another personal radio?"
"No, Sir. That won't be necessary. Pluto will either know or can quickly find out."
And why should I be able to have access to scarce communications facilities when ten thousand other fathers will have to wait until the services in their own good time get around to telling them whether their sons are dead or alive?
Don't get carried away, Pickering, and kick the goddamn gift horse in the goddamn mouth!
"You said there were two things, General?" Pickering asked.
"Yes, there are," MacArthur said, and reached to the table beside him and came up with a radio message. "This came in at the same time the other did."
MacArthur handed him the CINCPAC radio message announcing that Nimitz had relieved Ghormley and appointed Halsey to replace him.
"You saw Admiral Nimitz on your way here," MacArthur said. "Did he tell you he was thinking about doing something like this?"
It was, Pickering understood, more than a matter of curiosity.
MacArthur wanted to know if Pickering had information that he had not chosen to share with him.
"No, Sir," Pickering said, meeting MacArthur's eyes. "He didn't."
"Does this surprise you?"
"Admiral Nimitz gave me no indication that he was... dissatis-fied... with Admiral Ghormley," Pickering said.
"But?"
"But Ghormley seemed... General, you're putting me on the spot. I dislike criticizing officers who know vastly more about waging war than I do."
"Entre nous, Fleming," MacArthur said. "We are friends."
That was a command, not a request. He wants a reply and I will have to give him one.
And when in doubt, tell the truth.
"General, in the belief it would go no further, Pluto Hon said to me that Admiral Ghormley's radios of 16 and 17 October were unreasonable, and sounded a little desperate... the ones in which he claimed his forces were totally inadequate and requested tremendous new levels of support. I thought so, too."
"Absolutely!" MacArthur agreed. "The one thing a commander simply cannot do is appear unsure of himself. Nimitz saw this. He had no choice but to relieve Ghormley; Ghormley gave him none."
Pickering looked at him but did not reply.
"Relieving an officer, especially if he is someone you have served with and think of as a friend, is one of the most painful responsibilities of command," MacArthur declared. "It must have been very distressing for Admiral Nimitz."
He looked for a moment as if he was listening to his own words, and upon hearing them, agreeing with them. He nodded, then smiled.
"But at least he picked the right man," he said.
"You know Admiral Halsey, Sir?"
"I've met him. I know his reputation. But he is apparently someone who immediately takes charge. He has called a conference for the day after tomorrow at Noumea. Vandegrift will be there. And Harmon. And Patch. The Admiral is apparently one of those rare sailors who thinks that sometimes soldiers and Marines may have something to say worth listening to."
"Douglas!" Jean MacArthur chided. "That's unkind!"
MacArthur ignored her.
"In the belief that you would find this conference interesting, Fleming, I've arranged for a plane to take you there."
"That's very kind of you," Pickering said.
He suddenly understood: MacArthur had not been invited to Admiral Halsey's conference.
Prince Machiavelli knows that while I would be no more welcome there than he would, or any of his palace guard (Willoughby, for example), they can't keep me out. And, since we are friends, it is to be expected that on my return, I will report what happened. The wily old sonofabitch!
"But my mission here, Sir, is to convince you that Mr. Donovan's people would be of greater value than harm. I'm not sure I should go to Admiral Halsey's conference with that hanging in the air."
"We can tal
k about Wild Bill Donovan when you return," MacArthur said.
That could be interpreted to mean tit-for-tat; I go to the conference and tell you what they said, and you let Donovan's people in. But I know you better than that. When I return we will talk about Donovan again and you will tell me of another reason you don't want his camel's nose under your tent.
"General, you have again put me on the spot," Pickering said, draining his scotch. "Ethically. If I go to Halsey's conference, there is a good chance I will be made privy to things the Navy wouldn't wish you to know."
"My dear Fleming," MacArthur said. "I understand completely. But it is a moot point. If anything transpires at that conference that I should know, Admiral Nimitz will see to it that I do."
I believe that. I also believe that somewhere in the hills of Tennessee there is a pig that really can whistle.
"And anyway," MacArthur said, tapping his foot on the floor-mounted button again, and smiling at Pickering. "When they see you at the conference, they won't say anything they don't want me to hear. They know how close we are."
[FOUR]
Office of the Director of Public Affairs
Headquarters, U.S. Marine Corps
Eighth and I Streets, N.W.
Washington, D.C.
0945 Hours 20 October 1942
Brigadier General J. J. Stewart, USMC, a ruddy-faced, stocky, pleasant-looking officer of not-quite-fifty, had received by hand the square envelope he was now holding. In theory, every item delivered into the Navy Department message center system was treated like every other: It would gradually wend its way through the system until it ultimately arrived at its destination.
There were exceptions to every standard operating procedure, however, and the item General Stewart held in his hand headed the list of exceptions. The return address read: "The Secretary of the Navy, Washington, D.C."
General Stewart carefully opened the envelope by lifting the flap. His usual custom was to stab the envelope with his letter opener, a miniature Marine Officer's Sword given to him by his wife. But such an act felt too much like a-well, minor desecration. He extracted the single sheet of paper and read it carefully.
The Secretary of the Navy
Washington, D.C.
October 19, 1942
Brigadier General J. J. Stewart
Director, Public Affairs
Headquarters, U.S. Marine Corps
Washington, D.C.
The Secretary wishes it known, upon the release of Major Homer C. Dillon, USMCR from temporary duty with the Office of Management Analysis, that he is cognizant of, and deeply appreciative of, the extraordinary performance of duty by Major Dillon in the conduct of a classified mission of great importance.
The Secretary additionally wishes to express his appreciation of the professional skill and extraordinary devotion to duty, at what was obviously great personal risk, of Corporal Robert F. Easterbrook, USMC. Corporal Easterbrook's still and motion picture photography, when viewed by the President, the Secretary and certain members of the U.S. Senate, provided an insight into activities on Guadalcanal which would not have otherwise been available.
By Direction:
DAVID W. HAUGHTON
Captain, U.S. Navy
Administrative Assistant to the Secretary
General Stewart's first thought was that what he was reading had been written the day before. Probably late in the afternoon, or even at night. Otherwise it would have been delivered before this.
Then he began to try to understand what the words meant.
Though he could not be considered an actual thorn in General Stewart's side, Major Homer C. Dillon was the sort of officer who made General Stewart uncomfortable. He didn't fit into the system. He knew too many important people.
As for the "classified mission of great importance" Dillon had been involved in, General Stewart had no idea what it was all about. He'd been told at the time, and rather bluntly, that Major Dillon was being placed on temporary duty for an indefinite period with the Office of Management Analysis. He'd never previously heard of that organization. Yet when he quite naturally asked about it, he'd even more bluntly been told that his curiosity was unwelcome.
He'd made additional, very discreet inquiries, and learned that the Office of Management Analysis had virtually nothing to do with either management or analysis. That information did not surprise him; for he also learned that the number-two man at the Office of Management Analysis was Colonel F. L. Rickabee, whom General Stewart knew by reputation-the reputation being that he'd been involved in intelligence matters since he was a first lieutenant. The number-one man at Management Analysis was Brigadier General Fleming Pickering, a reservist. The Washington Post had described Pickering as a close personal friend of the President, and scuttlebutt had it that he was Secretary of the Navy Frank Knox's personal spy in the Pacific.
Dillon had obviously been doing something for the Office of Management Analysis.... Exactly what he was doing there, General Stewart suspected he would never know. But he'd done it well, witness the letter. And so now he was being returned to Public Affairs for duty, with the official thanks of the Secretary of the Navy.
But who the hell is this corporal?
"Sergeant Sawyer!" General Stewart called; and in a moment, Technical Sergeant Richard Sawyer, USMC, a lean, crisp Marine in his middle thirties, put his head in the door. General Stewart motioned him inside and Sergeant Sawyer closed the door behind him.
"Sawyer, were you aware that Major Dillon is being returned to us?"
"Yes, Sir. There was a call yesterday afternoon. The Major is apparently on his way here-by now, he's probably arrived-from the West Coast. I arranged for a BOQ for him."
"Good man," General Stewart said. "Does the name Easterbrook, Corporal Robert F., ring a bell with you?"
Sergeant Sawyer considered the question a moment, and then shook his head, no.
"No, Sir."
"See if you can find out who he is, will you?"
"Aye, aye, Sir," Sergeant Sawyer said, and then an idea came to him. "General, he may be one of the combat correspondents Major Dillon took with him when he went over there the first time, for the Guadalcanal invasion. I'll check."
"When he 'went over for the first time'? Sawyer," Stewart asked, picking up on that. "Are you saying that Major Dillon went overseas more than once? Has he been over there again?"
"Yes, Sir. I presume so. The call I had-"
"Who was that from?"
"Sir, from a Captain Sessions in the Office of Management Analysis. The Captain said, Sir, that Major Dillon had just arrived from Pearl Harbor."
"Thank you, Sergeant. See what you can turn up about the Corporal, will you?"
"Aye, aye, Sir. There's a copy of their orders around here someplace."
Five minutes later, Sergeant Sawyer returned to confirm that Corporal Robert F. Easterbrook was indeed a member of the team of combat correspondents Major Homer C. Dillon had taken to the Pacific for the invasion of Guadalcanal.
At 1015 Major Jake Dillon walked into the Public Affairs Division office and went up to the sergeant's desk just inside the door. Dillon was wearing an impeccably tailored uniform, and still smelling faintly of the after-shave applied by the barber in the Willard Hotel.
The sergeant stood up.
"May I help the Major?"
"I guess I'm reporting for duty, Sergeant. My name is Dillon."
The sergeant smiled. "Yes, Sir. We've been expecting you." He flipped a lever on a wooden intercom box on his desk. "General, Major Dillon is here."
"Splendid!" Stewart's voice replied metallically. "Please ask the Major to come in."
"If you'll come with me, please, Major?" the sergeant said, then led Dillon deep into the office, finally stopping before the desk of Technical Sergeant Sawyer.
"Major Dillon to see the General," he announced.
"Yes, Sir," Sergeant Sawyer said, and then went to a door, held it open, and announced, "Major Dillon, Sir."
r /> Dillon stepped in. Brigadier General J. J. Stewart walked across the room to him, smiling, his hand extended.
"Welcome home, Major Dillon," he said. "It's good to see you back."
"Thank you, Sir," Dillon said. It was not quite the reception he had anticipated. He'd heard that Brigadier General J. J. Stewart had asked rather persistent questions about what he was doing for Fleming Pickering, and that the General had been bluntly told to butt out.
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